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Before 'Fans,' There Were 'Kranks,' 'Longhairs,' and 'Lions'
How do fandoms gain their names?
by Elizabeth Minkel May 30, 2024
Before 'Fans,' There Were 'Kranks,' 'Longhairs,' and 'Lions'
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A huge crowd enjoying "base-ball" in May of 1886.
A huge crowd enjoying "base-ball" in May of 1886. Stock Montage/Getty
Images
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The exact origins of the modern term "fan" are disputed, but most
look to the 1880s, where it was first used by American newspapers to
describe particularly invested baseball enthusiasts. But "fan" was
just one of the words the press, leagues, clubs, and baseball
enthusiasts themselves were using at the time. They were called
"enthusiasts," but also a whole host of other names, from "rooters"
to "bugs" to "fiends" to "cranks," sometimes spelled--as in the German
word for "sick"--as "krank."
"The Krank is a heterogeneous compound of flesh, bone, and base-ball,
mostly base-ball," begins Thomas Williams Lawson's 1888 book The
Krank: His Language and What It Means, a small, humorous glossary
described by Major League Baseball's official historian, John Thorn,
as "baseball's rarest book." (Thorn has thankfully put a digitized
version online.)
"The Krank cannot be mistaken for any other animal," Lawson wrote.
"His peculiarities are numerous." Those peculiarities made for a
noisy and notably participatory kind of fan culture: Kranks would
heckle players, bang drums, and engage as much with each other as
with the game. They shared insider lingo and knowledge, like how to
bribe the ticket-taker to get into the more comfortable,
better-positioned grandstand over the bleachers. They were known to
outsiders--authorities, owners, reporters--as a group with an
encompassing set of traits. Much like fans today, they were often
treated as a monolith: one to be enticed because of their
enthusiasms, and policed when those enthusiasms didn't align with the
desires of non-fans.
Charles Dana Gibson (of "Gibson Girl" fame) drew this depiction of
the "matinee girls," a type of ardent theater fan at the turn of the
20th century.Charles Dana Gibson (of "Gibson Girl" fame) drew this
depiction of the "matinee girls," a type of ardent theater fan at the
turn of the 20th century. Pictures Now/Alamy
"How can we use instances of enthusiastic behavior in the past?" asks
Daniel Cavicchi, an American Studies scholar who teaches at the Rhode
Island School of Design. "How do we point to all of those and say,
'This is connected to what we consider fandom today?'" Cavicchi, who
began his academic career focusing on music fans, is now looking
through history to find instances of fandom-like groups, from fire
buffs to trainspotters to flower fanciers. "Clubs are formed, people
meet regularly, they start doing the same things, and they develop
their own language," Cavicchi says. "All of the things that we
associate with fandom today, from music to sports."
These groups, Cavicchi explains, were often considered too passionate
and problematic, both by outsiders and others within the fandom
itself. "Fandom, at least in Western, European, and North American
society, was not always accepted. There's always some sort of element
of society that wants to control it in some way, or tamp it down, or
put it in boundaries. So we can be enthusiastic, but not too
enthusiastic."
Finding the fans of past eras can be a tricky task. Language changes
a great deal over time, and much of how we view and discuss fan
culture today is mediated by the big modern structures that shape our
fannish worlds, from industries like Hollywood and sports leagues to
the spaces, both analog and digital, that bring fans together.
In this 1894 piece by Aubrey Beardsley, a group of "Wagnerites"
watches the opera Tristan und Isolde.In this 1894 piece by
Aubrey Beardsley, a group of "Wagnerites" watches the opera Tristan
und Isolde. Shirley Markham Collection/Getty Images
Cavicchi is particularly interested in the naming of fans and
fan-like groups--the way a label suggests a fannish identity, and puts
a boundary around its members. "I use words to think about the
history of fandom, because it's another entry point," he says. "It's
something that's visible, that left a trace, and we can kind of use
them as doorways into cultures." He began collecting names for
people-who-loved-things-in-groups years ago, which he published in a
paper entitled "Fandom Before "Fan": Shaping the History of
Enthusiastic Audiences." Though there were no "fans" before 1880, he
writes, "there were 'amateurs,' 'beggars,' 'boomers,' 'buffs,'
'bugs,' 'connoisseurs,' 'devotees,' 'dilettantes,' 'enthusiasts,'
'fanatics,' 'the fancy,' 'fiends,' 'gluttons,' 'habitues,' 'heads,'
'hounds,' 'kranks,' 'lions,' 'longhairs,' 'lovers,' 'maniacs,'
'matinee girls,' 'nuts,' 'rooters,' 'Lisztians,' 'Wagnerians,' and
more."
Lisztians and Wagnerians, the fans of the composers Franz Liszt and
Richard Wagner respectively, are clearly the most legible to modern
audiences. Fandom labels haven't changed much since, whether in the
musical sphere (Swifties) or TV shows (Whovians, fans of Doctor Who)
or celebrities (Cumberbitches, a term from the 2010's for passionate
fans of actor Benedict Cumberbatch). "Longhairs" were often also
Liszt fans: Liszt was an object of fandom so beloved that he provoked
the "Lisztomania" of the 1840's, which had people fainting at his
concerts and collecting his trash as keepsakes. Liszt's male fans
would carefully coif their long hair, in contrast with the relatively
unkempt Wagnerians.
"Lions" were also European music fans, taking their title from the
Loges de Lions at the Paris Opera. Loges are private or semi-private
boxes in opera houses and theaters, and at the Paris Opera, there
were sections where members of a particular art society sat to watch
the "lions of the stage" perform.
This 1842 print shows Liszt and a throng of his adoring fans.This
1842 print shows Liszt and a throng of his adoring fans. Public
Domain
Like fandom names today, some came from within the group, some came
from outsiders--and some fell in between. "The word 'fan' itself is
controversial because there were multiple stories about how it
emerged in baseball," Cavicchi explains. "Some say it was dismissive,
a team owner mocking the people who would hang out outside the dugout
and harass the players. Some say it was a term of snarky
endearment--journalists made it up because they saw there were these
people that really, really loved baseball, and it was kind of
endearing, but at the same time, it was a little bit odd, so they
made up this shortening of 'fanatic.'" Cavicchi notes that the
"fanatic" root is disputed, too; he prefers the theory that it's a
shortening of the much older "fancy," a word for boxing clubs from
the 18th century. The term "fancier" was in use by the 19th century,
many decades before "base-ball fans" were earning their nicknames.
This, of course, stretches across the history of fandom: Differences
like age, geography, approach, and values can lead to different
groups forming around the same thing. Trekkies versus Trekkers, for
instance, or Holmesians versus Sherlockians. "How you name yourself
says a lot about what you think of yourself and your very intense
passions," Cavicchi says. "But at the same time, another name or
variation on the name, or another use of your name, maybe in a
derogatory sense, may say something about what the culture thinks
about you." Modern fandom terms like "stan" and "fangirl" can connote
very different things depending on the speaker--overly emotional and
uncontrollable to a critic, or a term of in-group recognition to
fellow fans.
On August 1, 2001, a group of Sherlock Holmes fans from around the
world met to celebrate the anniversary of the serialization of
The Hound of the Baskervilles.On August 1, 2001, a group of
Sherlock Holmes fans from around the world met to celebrate the
anniversary of the serialization of The Hound of the Baskervilles.
Barry Batchelor/Getty Images
Looking for fandom in earlier eras and today is often about
recognizing and contextualizing slang. For example, the now-broad
term "buff" comes from "fire buff," a term for enthusiasts who stood
on street corners watching a blaze in buffalo-skin coats. Even as
some modern fandoms accept the names bestowed upon them by
music-management corporations or television studio marketers, fans
continue to create language for themselves, rendering some terms
largely indecipherable to outsiders. Cavicchi is particularly
interested in "why slang is so important for enthusiastic behavior.
It's almost like we don't want to name it, so slang is the next
recourse. That's what's available." That distance was as important
for 19th-century fans as it remains for some fans today. "[You can]
use slang to name that which isn't acceptable, and also to hide a
little bit, to not push against the cultural arbiters of taste," he
says. "So you can practice your fandom and understand yourselves as a
member of a group without being overly visible."
There are no perfect comparisons between pre-"fan" groups and modern
fandoms. To make them would flatten the context that shapes modern
fan cultures, just as much as 19th-century culture shaped the
"dilettantes," the "lovers," and the "matinee girls." But there's
something powerful in seeing that people in past eras not only loved
things deeply, but sought out other lovers of the thing--and gave
themselves a name.
Next in series
Where the Little Helicopter on Mars Fits in the History of Aviation
If the past is any guide, things are going to take off quickly.
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